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26. "history lesson: Know Thy Allies - What Bush got wrong about Yalta"
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By David Greenberg
Posted Tuesday, May 10, 2005, at 10:23 AM PT

After World War I, the political right in Germany developed a myth called the "stab in the back" theory to explain its people's defeat. Though military leaders had helped negotiate the war's end, they fixed blame on civilian leaders—especially Jews, socialists, and liberals—for "betraying" the brave German fighting men. This nasty piece of propaganda was later picked up by Hitler and the Nazis to stoke the populist resentment that fueled their rise to power.

America has had its own "stab in the back" myths. Last year, George W. Bush endorsed a revanchist view of the Vietnam War: that our political leaders undermined our military and denied us victory. Now, on his Baltic tour, he has endorsed a similar view of the Yalta accords, that great bugaboo of the old right.

Bush stopped short of accusing Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill of outright perfidy, but his words recalled those of hardcore FDR- and Truman-haters circa 1945. "The agreement at Yalta followed in the unjust tradition of Munich and the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact. Once again, when powerful governments negotiated, the freedom of small nations was somehow expendable. Yet this attempt to sacrifice freedom for the sake of stability left a continent divided and unstable. The captivity of millions in Central and Eastern Europe will be remembered as one of the greatest wrongs of history."

Bush's cavalier invocations of history for political purposes are not surprising. But for an American president to dredge up ugly old canards about Yalta stretches the boundaries of decency and should draw reprimands (and not only from Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.).

As every schoolchild should know, Roosevelt and Churchill had formed an alliance of necessity with Josef Stalin during World War II. Hardly blind to Stalin's evil, they nonetheless knew that Soviet forces were indispensable in defeating the Axis powers. "It is permitted in time of grave danger to walk with the devil until you have crossed the bridge," FDR said, quoting an old Bulgarian proverb. He and Churchill understood that Stalin would be helping to set war aims and to plan for its aftermath. Victory, after all, carried a price.

In February 1945, the "Big Three" met at a czarist resort near Yalta, in the Soviet Crimea, to continue the work begun at other summits, notably in Tehran in 1943. (Many of the alleged "betrayals" of Yalta, at least in rough form, were actually first sketched out in Tehran.) By this time, Soviet troops had conquered much of Eastern Europe from the Germans, including Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, East Prussia, and Eastern Germany. The Western allies, meanwhile, remained on the far side of the Rhine River. Having made terrible military sacrifices to gain these positions, Stalin resolved to convert them into political payoffs.

Many of the agreements the Big Three reached at Yalta were relatively uncontroversial: The Allies decided to demand unconditional surrender from Germany, to carve up the country into four zones for its postwar occupation, and to proceed with plans to set up the United Nations.

But other issues were contentious. Asia was one. FDR wanted Stalin to enter the war against Japan, so as to obviate any need for an American invasion. In return, Stalin demanded that Russia regain dominion over various lands, notably Sakhalin and the Kurile Islands, then under Japanese control. He forswore any designs on Manchuria, which would be returned to China.

By far the knottiest problem—and the source of lingering rage among the far right afterwards—was the fate of Poland and other liberated Eastern European countries. Over several months, the Allies had been divvying up Europe according to on-the-ground military realities and their own individual national interests. The United States and Britain had denied Stalin any role in postwar Italy. Churchill and Stalin had agreed (without Roosevelt's participation) that Britain would essentially control Greece, and Russia would essentially control Romania, Bulgaria, and Hungary.

Poland was another matter. In Lublin, Poland, the Soviets had set up a government of pro-Communist Poles. Back in London, however, a pro-Western group claimed to be the true government-in-exile. Throughout the war, Stalin had acted with customary barbarity in seeking an advantage. In 1940 he ordered the slaughter of thousands of Polish army officers in the Katyn Forest, fearing their potential allegiance to the London Poles. In 1944, he stalled his own army's march into Poland to let the Germans put down the Warsaw Uprising, again to strengthen the Communists' hand.

At Yalta, Stalin wanted FDR and Churchill to recognize the Lublin government. They refused. Instead, all agreed to accept a provisional government, with a pledge to hold "free and unfettered elections" soon. For other liberated European countries, the Big Three also pledged to establish "interim governmental authorities broadly representative of all democratic elements in the population" and committed to free elections.

Roosevelt knew that Stalin might renege, and it was perhaps cynical for him to trumpet elections that might never take place. But as the historian David M. Kennedy has written, he had little choice, "unless Roosevelt was prepared to order Eisenhower to fight his way across the breadth of Germany, take on the Red Army, and drive it out of Poland at gunpoint."

Stalin, of course, never allowed elections in Poland or anywhere else. "Our hopeful assumptions were soon to be falsified," Churchill wrote. "Still, they were the only ones possible at the time." Short of starting a hot war, the West was powerless to intervene, just as it was in Hungary in 1956 or Prague in 1968.

Because FDR kept many details of the Yalta agreements under wraps, people in Washington began whispering conspiratorially about "secret agreements." Soon, critics, especially on the far right, were charging that FDR and Churchill had sold out the people of Eastern Europe—charges that Bush's recent comments echo. They asserted that the ailing Roosevelt—he would die only weeks later—had come under the malign influence of pro-Communist advisers who gave Stalin the store.

But Yalta did not give Stalin control of the Eastern European countries. He was already there. Moreover, as Lloyd C. Gardner has argued, it's possible that postwar Europe could have turned out worse than it did. For all its evident failings, Yalta did lead to a revived Western Europe, a lessening of open warfare on the continent, and, notwithstanding Bush's remarks, relative stability. Without Yalta, Gardner notes, "the uneasy equilibrium of the Cold War might have deteriorated into something much worse—a series of civil wars or possibly an even darker Orwellian condition of localized wars along an uncertain border." Such "what if" games are generally pointless, but they can remind us that the harmonious Europe that Yalta's critics tout as a counter-scenario wasn't the only alternative to the superpower standoff.

Along with the myth of FDR's treachery in leading America into war, the "stab in the back" interpretation of Yalta became a cudgel with which the old right and their McCarthyite heirs tried to discredit a president they had long despised. Renouncing Yalta even became a plank in the 1952 Republican platform, although Eisenhower did not support it. In time, however, these hoary myths receded into the shadows, dimly remembered except as a historical curiosity, where, alas, they should have remained undisturbed.

David Greenberg writes the "History Lesson" column and teaches at Rutgers University. He is the author of Nixon's Shadow: The History of an Image.

Article URL: http://slate.msn.com/id/2118394/


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Now you know - and knowing is half the battle!

  

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Was World War II worth it? [View all] , foxnesn, Thu May-12-05 12:39 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 12th 2005
1
RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 12th 2005
7
      Isn't he referring to
May 12th 2005
9
      RE: Isn't he referring to
May 12th 2005
17
           RE: Isn't he referring to
May 12th 2005
19
                RE: Isn't he referring to
May 13th 2005
35
                     RE: Isn't he referring to
May 13th 2005
36
      RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 12th 2005
18
lol @ Bush openning a debate that has been going on for decades
May 12th 2005
2
lol @ Bush opening a debate, period
May 12th 2005
4
RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 12th 2005
3
RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 12th 2005
6
      RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 12th 2005
13
           RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 12th 2005
16
                RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 12th 2005
21
                wow.....^^
May 12th 2005
25
                ya'll really shouldn't be suprised
May 14th 2005
49
                ^^ you should read.."
May 13th 2005
29
                RE: ^^ you should read.."
May 13th 2005
32
                     RE: ^^ you should read.."
May 13th 2005
39
                          RE: ^^ you should read.."
May 14th 2005
50
                               that's a big reason why we SHOULDNT have been there
May 14th 2005
52
                ^^^ ..wow.. Tarnished denies U.S. Imperialism ^^
May 16th 2005
57
                     RE: ^^^ ..wow.. Tarnished denies U.S. Imperialism ^^
May 16th 2005
58
                          ^^ Indonesia,Haiti,Vietnam ARE PERFECT examples ^^
May 16th 2005
59
the pot calling the kettle black
May 12th 2005
5
RE: the pot calling the kettle black
May 12th 2005
8
RE: the pot calling the kettle black
May 12th 2005
10
      RE: the pot calling the kettle black
May 12th 2005
11
RE: the pot calling the kettle black
May 12th 2005
20
not justifying u.s. actions
May 13th 2005
34
The USA could not "colonize" Vietnam.
May 13th 2005
31
      and i agree with you...
May 13th 2005
38
      Vietnam is like 911...
May 13th 2005
43
           RE: Vietnam is like 911...
May 13th 2005
45
      RE: The USA could not "colonize" Vietnam.
May 13th 2005
40
           Yes-the USA lost in Vietnam.
May 14th 2005
47
                RE: Yes-the USA lost in Vietnam.
May 14th 2005
48
I would expect no less from Buchanan or Activist.
May 12th 2005
12
gotta say, i agree with expertise on this one.
May 12th 2005
14
^^....yup....^^
May 12th 2005
24
put very nicely. nm
May 13th 2005
37
hrm...
May 13th 2005
42
      read the Slate article in post #26
May 13th 2005
44
           RE: read the Slate article in post #26
May 14th 2005
46
                cut the coy bullshit out
May 14th 2005
53
                     somedays i swear you are brain dead
May 16th 2005
54
                          even if I was brain dead I'd still make more sense than you
May 16th 2005
60
                               RE: even if I was brain dead I'd still make more sense than you
May 16th 2005
61
                                    wow, you folded earlier than usual this time
May 17th 2005
63
good post
May 12th 2005
15
I don't think they would have just taken Poland and been happy, lol
May 12th 2005
22
More Right-Wing Mythology.
May 12th 2005
23
Ask a stupid question...
May 12th 2005
27
RE: Ask a stupid question...
May 12th 2005
28
      RE: Ask a stupid question...
May 13th 2005
30
      Have you seen comments from the Iraq war?
May 13th 2005
33
           RE: Have you seen comments from the Iraq war?
May 13th 2005
41
RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 14th 2005
51
I love how sees the end of empires as among the bad things
May 16th 2005
55
Are OkActivists cool wt/this Neo-Con horseshit ?
May 16th 2005
56
RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 17th 2005
62
RE: Was World War II worth it?
May 17th 2005
64

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